paprik
Appearance
Livonian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Latvian paprika.
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]paprik
Declension
[edit]| singular (ikšlu’g) | plural (pǟgiņlu’g) | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative (nominatīv) | paprik | paprikõd |
| genitive (genitīv) | paprik | paprikõd |
| partitive (partitīv) | paprikõ | paprikidi |
| dative (datīv) | paprikõn | paprikõdõn |
| instrumental (instrumentāl) | paprikõks | paprikõdõks |
| illative (illatīv) | paprikõ | paprikiž |
| inessive (inesīv) | paprikõs | paprikis |
| elative (elatīv) | paprikõst | paprikist |
References
[edit]- Tiit-Rein Viitso; Valts Ernštreits (2012–2013), “paprik”, in Līvõkīel-ēstikīel-lețkīel sõnārōntõz [Livonian-Estonian-Latvian Dictionary][1] (in Estonian and Latvian), Tartu, Rīga: Tartu Ülikool, Latviešu valodas aģentūra
Malay
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From pad prik, ultimately from Thai ผัด (pàt, “fried”) + Thai พริก (prík, “chili”).
Not related to paprika.
Noun
[edit]paprik (plural paprik-paprik or paprik2)